The Reconstruction Agenda

The UnPopulist

Rebuilding America's broken democracy www.theunpopulist.net

Episodes

  1. May 18

    A Bloated Executive and a Starved Congress Is a Bad Combination: A Conversation with Kevin Kosar

    Listen to The Reconstruction Agenda from The UnPopulist in your favorite podcast app: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | YouTube Welcome to The Reconstruction Agenda. I’m Andy Craig. At the heart of our constitutional system is Congress, the first branch, Article I. We’ve spent a lot of time talking about the runaway presidency, the courts, executive overreach. But there’s a flip side to that story that gets much less attention: what has happened to Congress itself. Not in terms of who controls the majority or how our electoral system works, but the workaday functioning of Congress as an institution. Is it capable of doing the things we need it to do? Congress is supposed to write the laws to govern a $7 trillion federal government and hundreds of agencies. It’s supposed to oversee the executive branch, scrutinize the budget, set policy on everything from welfare programs to nuclear weapons. To do all that, it relies on a workforce: committee staff, personal office staff, nonpartisan support agencies. And this has been shrinking for decades, even as the complexity and scale of the federal government has exploded. So the result is a legislature that increasingly can’t write its own bills, can’t evaluate the programs it funds, and can’t check the executive branch without relying on the very lobbyists and interest groups it’s supposed to be regulating. To help us understand what’s gone wrong and what it would take to fix it, I’m happy to be joined today by Kevin R. Kosar. Kevin is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute where he studies Congress and the administrative state. He’s the co-editor of Congress Overwhelmed: The Decline in Congressional Capacity and the Prospects for Reform. He co-founded the Legislative Branch Capacity Working Group and also hosts the Understanding Congress podcast. Before all that, he spent more than a decade working at the Congressional Research Service. So he’s seen the problem from the inside. Thanks for checking out The UnPopulist! Subscribe to support our project. © The UnPopulist, 2026 Follow us on Bluesky, Threads, YouTube, TikTok, Facebook, Instagram, and X. Get full access to The UnPopulist at www.theunpopulist.net/subscribe

    29 min
  2. 10/20/2025

    The Founders Never Meant to Give the President Unchecked Removal Powers: A Conversation with Noah Rosenblum

    The Constitution’s text provides that the president “shall appoint by and with the advice and consent of the Senate” various officers, and allows Congress to exempt some inferior officers within the executive branch from that requirement. But the Constitution is silent on who can fire them—i.e., the removal power. So now we have a president whose catchphrase is, “you’re fired”—and he’s putting that to the test. Emboldened by the Supreme Court, Trump has sought to fire, among others, a member of the Federal Trade Commission and a member of the Federal Reserve Board. But this hasn’t always been how American government worked. There’s a long history of Congress trying to constrain who the president can fire and under what circumstances, most often by requiring “for cause” protections for certain quasi-independent agencies. Most recently, the Supreme Court has taken up the issue of Trump’s attempted firing of an FTC commissioner. Oral arguments are scheduled for later this year in which the court might do what it has long hinted at: overturning the New Deal-era case Humphrey’s Executor, which also involved a president, in that case FDR, trying to fire an FTC commissioner over policy disagreements. But underlying Humphrey’s is another little-known case that helped give us the modern supercharged presidency. That’s Myers v. United States, a 1926 opinion written by Chief Justice William Howard Taft, whom you might remember from your bar trivia as the only ex-president to serve on the Supreme Court. As our guest today has argued persuasively, Myers has a lot of problems. So, to help unpack this issue, host Andy Craig is joined today by Noah Rosenblum, Associate Professor of Law at New York University, specializing in constitutional law and legal history, including this exact question. *** © The UnPopulist, 2025 Follow us on Bluesky, Threads, YouTube, TikTok, Facebook, Instagram, and X. Get full access to The UnPopulist at www.theunpopulist.net/subscribe

    1h 5m

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Rebuilding America's broken democracy www.theunpopulist.net

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